CORE - Bloomfield Hills School District · 2015-03-20 · - Common Core State Standards Initiative....
Transcript of CORE - Bloomfield Hills School District · 2015-03-20 · - Common Core State Standards Initiative....
Where did it come from and what is its purpose?
A. In 2009 the National Governors Association convened a group of educators to work on developing the standards.
B. Designed to "provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them." Additionally, "The standards are designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our young people need for success in college and careers," which will place American students in a position in which they can compete in a global economy.
- Common Core State Standards Initiative.
● Provide a single set of consistent standards● Less issue when students move or transfer
from state to state● Teachers sharing best practice (how vs.
what)● Technology infused: preparing students for
the technology rich workforce● Content knowledge and skill progression
that will inform curriculum, instruction and assessment development.
● College and Career Readiness Standards
National Standards
What are they not?
● Do not define how teachers should teach● Do not describe all that can or should be
taught● Do not define the nature of advanced work● Do not define intervention methods or
materials necessary to support students below grade level
● Not assessment● Not teacher evaluation● Standards, not curriculum
Why now?
● Disparate standards across states● Student mobility● Global competition● Today’s jobs require different skills● Colleges complaining of ill-prepared
students and too much remediation
Why is this important for students, teachers, and parents?
● Prepares students with the skills they need to succeed in college and work
● Ensures consistent expectations regardless of a student’s zip code
● Provides educators and parents with clear, focused and coherent guideposts
● Not a mile wide and inch deep
•The MEAP (grades 3-8 & 11) will move from October to spring (2015)
•Testing will be computer-based and adaptive to students’ responses:
selected response technology enhanced
constructed response performance tasks
Shifts in Standardized Testing
Focus:● Narrowing the concepts learned & linking
them to real-world skills● Stress understanding of key ideas and
organizing principles of math (i.e. place value & fractions)
● Foster coherence to help ensure that students build skills within and across grade levels
Math (CCSS-M)
1. Make sense of problems & persevere in solving them.2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.3. Construct viable arguments & critique the reasoning of others.4. Model with mathematics.5. Use appropriate tools strategically.6. Attend to precision.7. Look for, and make use of, structure.8. Look for, and express regularity in, repeated reasoning.
8 Mathematical Practices:
N.MR.04.22 Locate fractions with denominators of 12 or less on the number line; include mixed numbers.
4.NF.6 Use decimal notation for fractions with denominators 10 or 100. For example, rewrite 0.62 as 62/100; describe a length as 0.62 meters; locate 0.62 on a number line diagram.
Shifts: GLCE to CCSS
4.NF.7 Compare two decimals to hundredths by reasoning about their size. Recognize that comparisons are valid only when two decimals refer to the same whole. Record the results of comparisons with the symbols >, =, or <, and justify the conclusions, e.g., by using a visual model.
Number & Operations - Fractions
Application of place value4.NBT.1 - Recognize that in a multi-digit whole number, a digit in one place represents ten times what it represents in the place to its right.
Select all the statements that correctly describe 888,888.● The 8 in the hundreds place has 10 times the value of
the 8 in the tens place.● The 8 in the ten thousands place has 100 times the value
of the 8 in the thousands place.● The 8 in the thousands place has 10 times the value of
the 8 in the hundreds place.● The 8 in the hundred thousands place has 100 times the
value of the 8 in the thousands place. (tenmarks.com)
● Ask your child to explain their thinking ○ when solving problems, or explaining their
knowledge● Help your child persevere when solving problems
○ rather than giving up, is there another way to solve this problem?
● Reinforce basic math facts and math fluency○ addition, subtraction, multiplication & division
● Use creative ways to support math○ look for patterns and call them out○ connect math to everyday life
Supporting your child at home
Supporting your child at home● Every child gets it (a.k.a pops) at different
times. Support them where they are and exercise patience.
● If they are frustrated with your help, try a different approach or give them some time and try again with something they are interested in.
● If your child is interested in technology, utilize some of the free resources to try and “hook” them or to help things “click.”
Key Features: 4 areas of focus● Reading: Text complexity and the growth of
comprehension○ sophistication of material○ skill with which students read
■ discern more, make fuller use of the text■ make connections between text and prior knowledge,
using textual evidence to support understanding● Writing: Text types, responding to reading, research
○ skills: plan, revise, edit, publish○ types: argument, informative, narrative○ connection to reading, responding to a text, evidence
from a literary and informational text○ research
ELA (CCSS-E)
● Speaking & Listening: Flexible communication & collaboration○ oral communication and interpersonal skills:
■ formal presentations, team collaboration■ express & listen to ideas■ integrate information from oral, visual, quantitative
and media sources■ evaluate what they hear■ adapt speech to context and task
● Language: Conventions, effective use, and vocabulary○ essential “rules” of standard written & spoken English○ language as a matter of craft and informed choice○ vocabulary
ELA (CCSS-E)
Key Shifts in ELA
1. Regular practice with complex texts and academic vocabulary.a. Staircase of complexity vs. quantity b. Building academic language (ignite, commit, inquire,
etc)2. Reading, writing and speaking grounded in evidence
from texts (both fiction and nonfiction).a. Sequence and detailb. Crafting an argument and sharing informationc. Evidence-based writing
3. Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction.
Distribution of literary and informational passages by grade (2009 NAEP* Reading Framework)
*National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
Areas of Emphasis
Distribution of communicative purposes by grade (Writing) (2011 NAEP Writing Framework)
Grade Literary Informational
4 50% 50%
8 45% 55%
12 30% 70%
Grade To Persuade
To Explain
To Convey Experience
4 30% 35% 35%
8 35% 35% 30%
12 40% 40% 20%
● CCSS focuses on evidence-based communication (reading, writing, and speaking).○ students have rich conversations which are dependent on
a common text.● Emphasis is placed on reading and understanding more
complex texts to prepare students for college and work.○ “complex text”: density of information, multiple and/or
subtle themes and purposes, unfamiliar settings or events, complex sentences, uncommon vocabulary, and longer paragraphs.
● Writing shifts to focus on the use of evidence to inform or make an argument rather than the personal narrative or other forms of decontextualized prompts. Students respond to the ideas, events, facts and arguments present in the texts they read.
Areas of Emphasis
Upon graduation students will:● Demonstrate independence in reading and
writing● Build a strong content knowledge through
exposure to a wide range of high quality texts● Respond to the varying demands of audience,
task, purpose, and discipline● Comprehend as well as critique● Value evidence● Use technology and digital media strategically
and capably ● Understand other perspectives and cultures
Outcomes
● Don’t be afraid to look at the standards for your child’s grade level.○ The Appendices provide:
■ Background/research on the design & creation of the standards (Appendix A)
■ Text exemplars & sample performance tasks(Appendix B)
■ Samples of student writing (Appendix C)● Create a balance of reading opportunities at
home between literary and informational texts.○ Nonfiction: books about history, social studies,
science, the arts, charts and maps.
Supporting your child at home
● Engage your child with the texts you read together.○ ask your student to identify key concepts○ ask follow up questions “who,” “what,” “where,”
“when,” and “why”○ ask your child to make predictions
● Encourage your child to write, not only narratives and opinions, but also explanations and reports○ how to make his/her favorite cookie○ the journey he/she took while holiday shopping
Supporting your child at home
Common Core at Eastover
We will continue to provide opportunities to model and promote Common Core thinking moves in the classroom:
InterpretAnalyze
PerspectiveReasoning
JustifyClarify
QuestionReflect
What it might sound or look like at Eastover
● Launch or Productive Struggle
Builds understandings
Clarify or justify thinking
Uncovers prior knowledge
● Headlines
Summarizing
Captures the heart of topic/ideas
● Step inside/Circle of Viewpoints
Perspective taking
Reflection
What it might sound or look like at Eastover (cont)
● Claim, Support, Question
Define the problem
Analyze and interpret patterns to make claims
Use reasoning to justify your evidence and answers
● What makes you say that?
Builds explanations
Promotes reasoning with evidence
● Question starts
Sets stage for deeper inquiry
Evaluate and Reflect on questions or wonderings
Type of learning Common Core and VT are NOT looking to foster
● Memorization● Basic recall● Typical “worksheet” thinking● Surface learning
Video clip link/s
http://achievethecore.org/page/762/introductory-videos-on-the-common-core-state-standards
“There are so many more skills involved now. In one standard, they will ask the child to critique and evaluate, comprehend and discern. The challenge for us is to turn them from answering machines into thinking machines.” -Mr.Bui,
educator
“These standards should be looked at by teachers and administrators as a floor and not a ceiling for students’ achievement.” -Reeves, 2011
Educational Researcher
Learn more● Common Core Standards Initiative
www.corestandards.org● Videos from the Hunt Institute (several
titles that include interviews with CCSS authors explaining the standards)
www.youtube.com/thehuntinstitute
Contact Info
Eastover ElementaryCarey Crocker, Principal [email protected]
Directors of Learning ServicesChristine DiPilato [email protected] Heidi Kattula [email protected]